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Перевод: preacher
[существительное] проповедник
Тезаурус:
- At 33, Gerry Cooney is cranking up to beat another golden oldie, George Foreman, who is 41, in Atlantic City next month under the promotion banner The Preacher and The Puncher.
- The Evangelical Alliance was founded in 1846 largely under the inspiration of a Polish Jew, Ridley Herschell, who had been converted in London and became a notable Nonconformist preacher in the capital.
- Much of this new energy is imported: Holy Trinity follows the ideas of a Californian preacher called John Wimber, a man with no formal theological training who leads a body called the Renewal Movement.
- John How was a solid good preacher but not a magnet to multitudes.
- The retreat consisted, and still does, of anything from five to thirty days of spiritual exercises, usually in an atmosphere of silence and contemplation apart from listening to the preacher when there is one, but with additional features of both vocal and silent prayer.
- When the clock struck, the preacher came down from a little room behind the platform, followed by ten or a dozen men who looked like prosperous City merchants.
- The preacher's arrogance and pomposity made Rosebery erupt: "He is a buffoon without the merits of a buffoon."
- Chapman, along with many footballers, went to church regularly, but half-back and captain Lintott made a more positive contribution to Sunday worship - as a popular preacher.
- By the end of the century some might still moan that "it would shock many to suggest that a plain dissenting preacher might be as great a man as an Archbishop" but this was simply twaddle.
- That, argued an early church preacher, John Chrysostom, is why Jesus performed his first miracle at the wedding in Cana of Galilee.
- The pastorate had passed first to his brother; on his death it had reverted to one of the famous preacher's twin sons.
- There were, inevitably, undesirable aspects in this emphasis on preaching: congregations shopped about and when a preacher died the congregation dwindled: after Spurgeon's death the attendance at the Tabernacle fell from over ten thousand to just over 3,500.
- When "A Travelling Correspondent" in the 1870s asked why Shoreditch needed a Tabernacle, he answered "because a man has lately settled there who, as a preacher of the Gospel, can attract a full house".
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